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This is a very large refactoring which aims at making Tutor both more extendable and more generic. Historically, the Tutor plugin system was designed as an ad-hoc solution to allow developers to modify their own Open edX platforms without having to fork Tutor. The plugin API was simple, but limited, because of its ad-hoc nature. As a consequence, there were many things that plugin developers could not do, such as extending different parts of the CLI or adding custom template filters. Here, we refactor the whole codebase to make use of a generic plugin system. This system was inspired by the Wordpress plugin API and the Open edX "hooks and filters" API. The various components are added to a small core thanks to a set of actions and filters. Actions are callback functions that can be triggered at different points of the application lifecycle. Filters are functions that modify some data. Both actions and filters are collectively named as "hooks". Hooks can optionally be created within a certain context, which makes it easier to keep track of which application created which callback. This new hooks system allows us to provide a Python API that developers can use to extend their applications. The API reference is added to the documentation, along with a new plugin development tutorial. The plugin v0 API remains supported for backward compatibility of existing plugins. Done: - Do not load commands from plugins which are not enabled. - Load enabled plugins once on start. - Implement contexts for actions and filters, which allow us to keep track of the source of every hook. - Migrate patches - Migrate commands - Migrate plugin detection - Migrate templates_root - Migrate config - Migrate template environment globals and filters - Migrate hooks to tasks - Generate hook documentation - Generate patch reference documentation - Add the concept of action priority Close #499.
234 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
234 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
Plugin API
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==========
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.. include:: legacy.rst
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Plugins can affect the behaviour of Tutor at multiple levels. They can:
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* Add new settings or modify existing ones in the Tutor configuration (see :ref:`config <v0_plugin_config>`).
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* Add new templates to the Tutor project environment or modify existing ones (see :ref:`patches <v0_plugin_patches>`, :ref:`templates <v0_plugin_templates>` and :ref:`hooks <v0_plugin_hooks>`).
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* Add custom commands to the Tutor CLI (see :ref:`command <v0_plugin_command>`).
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There exist two different APIs to create Tutor plugins: either with YAML files or Python packages. YAML files are more simple to create but are limited to just configuration and template patches.
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.. _v0_plugin_config:
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config
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~~~~~~
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The ``config`` attribute is used to modify existing and add new configuration parameters:
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* ``config["add"]`` are key/values that should be added to the user-specific ``config.yml`` configuration. Add there the passwords, secret keys, and other values that do not have a reasonable default value for all users.
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* ``config["defaults"]`` are default key/values for this plugin. These values can be accessed even though they are not added to the ``config.yml`` user file. Users can override them manually with ``tutor config save --set ...``.
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* ``config["set"]`` are existing key/values that should be modified. Be very careful what you add there! Different plugins may define conflicting values for some parameters.
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"add" and "defaults" key names will be automatically prefixed with the plugin name, in upper case.
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Example::
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config = {
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"add": {
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"SECRET_KEY": "{{ 8|random_string }}"
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}
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"defaults": {
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"DOCKER_IMAGE": "username/imagename:latest",
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},
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"set": {
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"MASTER_PASSWORD": "h4cked",
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},
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}
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This configuration from the "myplugin" plugin will set the following values:
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- ``MYPLUGIN_SECRET_KEY``: an 8-character random string will be generated and stored in the user configuration.
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- ``MYPLUGIN_DOCKER_IMAGE``: this value will by default not be stored in ``config.yml``, but ``tutor config printvalue MYPLUGIN_DOCKER_IMAGE`` will print ``username/imagename:latest``.
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- ``MASTER_PASSWORD`` will be set to ``h4cked``. Needless to say, plugin developers should avoid doing this.
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.. _v0_plugin_patches:
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patches
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~~~~~~~
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Plugin patches affect the rendered environment templates. In many places the Tutor templates include calls to ``{{ patch("patchname") }}``. This grants plugin developers the possibility to modify the content of rendered templates. Plugins can add content in these places by adding values to the ``patches`` attribute. See :ref:`patches` for the complete list available patches.
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Example::
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patches = {
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"local-docker-compose-services": """redis:
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image: redis:latest"""
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}
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This will add a Redis instance to the services run with ``tutor local`` commands.
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.. note::
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In Python plugins, remember that ``patches`` can be a callable function instead of a static dict value.
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One can use this to dynamically load a list of patch files from a folder.
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.. _v0_plugin_hooks:
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hooks
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~~~~~
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Hooks are actions that are run during the lifetime of the platform. For instance, hooks are used to trigger database initialisation and migrations. Each hook has a different specification.
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``init``
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++++++++
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The services that will be run during initialisation should be added to the ``init`` hook, for instance for database creation and migrations.
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Example::
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hooks = {
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"init": ["myservice1", "myservice2"]
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}
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During initialisation, "myservice1" and "myservice2" will be run in sequence with the commands defined in the templates ``myplugin/hooks/myservice1/init`` and ``myplugin/hooks/myservice2/init``.
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To initialise a "foo" service, Tutor runs the "foo-job" service that is found in the ``env/local/docker-compose.jobs.yml`` file. By default, Tutor comes with a few services in this file: mysql-job, lms-job, cms-job. If your plugin requires running custom services during initialisation, you will need to add them to the ``docker-compose.jobs.yml`` template. To do so, just use the "local-docker-compose-jobs-services" patch.
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In Kubernetes, the approach is the same, except that jobs are implemented as actual job objects in the ``k8s/jobs.yml`` template. To add your services there, your plugin should implement the "k8s-jobs" patch.
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``pre-init``
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++++++++++++
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This hook will be executed just before the ``init`` hooks. Otherwise, the specs are identical. This is useful for creating databases or other resources that will be required during initialisation, for instance.
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``build-image``
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+++++++++++++++
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This is a hook that will be run to build a docker image for the requested service.
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Example::
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hooks = {
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"build-image": {"myimage": "myimage:latest"}
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}
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With this hook, users will be able to build the ``myimage:latest`` docker image by running::
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tutor images build myimage
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or::
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tutor images build all
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This assumes that there is a ``Dockerfile`` file in the ``myplugin/build/myimage`` subfolder of the plugin templates directory.
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``remote-image``
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++++++++++++++++
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This hook allows pulling/pushing images from/to a docker registry.
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Example::
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hooks = {
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"remote-image": {"myimage": "myimage:latest"},
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}
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With this hook, users will be able to pull and push the ``myimage:latest`` docker image by running::
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tutor images pull myimage
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tutor images push myimage
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or::
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tutor images pull all
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tutor images push all
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.. _v0_plugin_templates:
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templates
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~~~~~~~~~
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To define plugin-specific hooks, a plugin should also have a template directory that includes the plugin hooks. The ``templates`` attribute should point to that directory.
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Example::
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import os
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templates = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__)), "templates")
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With the above declaration, you can store plugin-specific templates in the ``templates/myplugin`` folder next to the ``plugin.py`` file.
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In Tutor, templates are `Jinja2 <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/>`__-formatted files that will be rendered in the Tutor environment (the ``$(tutor config printroot)/env`` folder) when running ``tutor config save``. The environment files are overwritten every time the environment is saved. Plugin developers can create templates that make use of the built-in `Jinja2 API <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/api/>`__. In addition, a couple of additional filters are added by Tutor:
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* ``common_domain``: Return the longest common name between two domain names. Example: ``{{ "studio.demo.myopenedx.com"|common_domain("lms.demo.myopenedx.com") }}`` is equal to "demo.myopenedx.com".
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* ``encrypt``: Encrypt an arbitrary string. The encryption process is compatible with `htpasswd <https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/programs/htpasswd.html>`__ verification.
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* ``list_if``: In a list of ``(value, condition)`` tuples, return the list of ``value`` for which the ``condition`` is true.
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* ``long_to_base64``: Base-64 encode a long integer.
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* ``iter_values_named``: Yield the values of the configuration settings that match a certain pattern. Example: ``{% for value in iter_values_named(prefix="KEY", suffix="SUFFIX")%}...{% endfor %}``. By default, only non-empty values are yielded. To iterate also on empty values, pass the ``allow_empty=True`` argument.
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* ``patch``: See :ref:`patches <v0_plugin_patches>`.
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* ``random_string``: Return a random string of the given length composed of ASCII letters and digits. Example: ``{{ 8|random_string }}``.
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* ``reverse_host``: Reverse a domain name (see `reference <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_domain_name_notation>`__). Example: ``{{ "demo.myopenedx.com"|reverse_host }}`` is equal to "com.myopenedx.demo".
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* ``rsa_import_key``: Import a PEM-formatted RSA key and return the corresponding object.
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* ``rsa_private_key``: Export an RSA private key in PEM format.
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* ``walk_templates``: Iterate recursively over the templates of the given folder. For instance::
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{% for file in "apps/myplugin"|walk_templates %}
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...
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{% endfor %}
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When saving the environment, template files that are stored in a template root will be rendered to the environment folder. The following files are excluded:
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* Binary files with the following extensions: .ico, .jpg, .png, .ttf
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* Files that are stored in a folder named "partials", or one of its subfolders.
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.. _v0_plugin_command:
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command
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~~~~~~~
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Python plugins can provide a custom command line interface.
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The ``command`` attribute is assumed to be a `click.Command <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/api/#commands>`__ object,
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and you typically implement them using the `click.command <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/api/#click.command>`__ decorator.
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You may also use the `click.pass_obj <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/api/#click.pass_obj>`__ decorator to pass the CLI `context <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/api/#click.Context>`__, such as when you want to access Tutor configuration settings from your command.
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Example::
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import click
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from tutor import config as tutor_config
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@click.command(help="I'm a plugin command")
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@click.pass_obj
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def command(context):
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config = tutor_config.load(context.root)
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lms_host = config["LMS_HOST"]
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click.echo("Hello from myplugin!")
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click.echo(f"My LMS host is {lms_host}")
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Any user who installs the ``myplugin`` plugin can then run::
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$ tutor myplugin
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Hello from myplugin!
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My LMS host is demo.openedx.overhang.io
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You can even define subcommands by creating `command groups <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/api/#click.Group>`__::
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import click
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@click.group(help="I'm a plugin command group")
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def command():
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pass
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@command.command(help="I'm a plugin subcommand")
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def dosomething():
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click.echo("This subcommand is awesome")
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This would allow any user to see your sub-commands::
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$ tutor myplugin
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Usage: tutor myplugin [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
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I'm a plugin command group
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Commands:
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dosomething I'm a plugin subcommand
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and then run them::
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$ tutor myplugin dosomething
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This subcommand is awesome
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See the official `click documentation <https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/8.0.x/>`__ for more information.
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